you bet it can
No, angles that form a linear pair are supplementary.
Yes.
Not necessarily. A linear pair of angles must be supplementary but supplementary angles need not form a linear pair. For example, the opposite angles of a cyclic quadrilateral are supplementary but they are (by definition) not next to one another.
All supplementary angles do not form a linear pair. The opposite angles of any quadrilateral inscribed in a circle (a cyclic quadrilateral) are supplementary but they are not a linear pair. However, all linear pair are supplementary.
you bet it can
no it's impossible
In a Linear Pair the 2 angles add up to 180 degrees while Vertical Angles are just 2 vertical angles that are congruent.
No, in fact, vertical angles can't be a linear pair. Vertical angles are opposite from each other which also make them equal each other. A linear pair has two angles adjacent to each other that eqaul 180 degrees.
No, angles that form a linear pair are supplementary.
Yes.
The linear pair conjecture states that if two angles form a linear pair, the sum of the angles is 180 degrees.
sometime true
Not necessarily. A linear pair of angles must be supplementary but supplementary angles need not form a linear pair. For example, the opposite angles of a cyclic quadrilateral are supplementary but they are (by definition) not next to one another.
If they do , the angles are supplementary !
All supplementary angles do not form a linear pair. The opposite angles of any quadrilateral inscribed in a circle (a cyclic quadrilateral) are supplementary but they are not a linear pair. However, all linear pair are supplementary.
A linear pair would be two angles that form a straight angle of 180 degrees.